On a gray-skied afternoon in early June 2026, the Pont-Neuf stopped being a bridge. From the air, it looked like a chain of snow-covered peaks slicing across the Seine , a mirage of alpine stone and ice where cars and pedestrians usually cross. On my visit to Gallimard Publishing House ( Editions Gallimard) , I saw this amazing artistic creation. Incidentally, Albert Camus worked at a senior position at Gallimard ,Paris from 1943 till his death in 1960 .
This is “The Pont Neuf cave”, French photographer and street artist JR’s latest monumental illusion. For about a month, Paris’s oldest standing bridge will be wrapped in a full-scale trompe-l’œil that has turned the 16th-century masonry into a prehistoric landscape.
Who Is JR?
JR is a French photographer and street artist who works anonymously, recognisable only by his fedora and dark sunglasses. Born Jean Rene in Paris in 1983, he pastes monumental black-and-white photographs in public spaces to reframe how we see them ; from making the Louvre Pyramid vanish in 2016 to turning the Pont-Neuf into a mountain cave in 2026. His projects are participatory and deliberately ephemeral: the 2011 TED Prize-winning ,'Inside Out' has seen over 500,000 portraits displayed worldwide, while, 'Face 2 Face' placed Israelis and Palestinians side by side on the separation wall. JR favours anamorphic illusions and ordinary faces on grand façades, using scale and surprise to question identity, borders and permanence. The work is free, temporary and often unauthorised; once removed, only the altered perspective remains.
The illusion
JR’s team covered the entire span with printed fabric that mimics craggy limestone cliffs, extending the bridge’s arches into a continuous rock face. Above, inflated white volumes rise like glaciers or karst formations, their ridges and shadows painted with photographic precision. The effect is disorienting: the Pont-Neuf, inaugurated by Henri IV in 1607, appears to have been carved from a mountain rather than built across a river.
From the quays, you walk through the cave. From above, , you can see a mountain range bisecting the city. Tour boats drift under stone arches that never existed, and the dome of the Institut de France seems to sit at the foot of a cliff.
Brief History of Pont Neuf
The Pont-Neuf is the oldest standing bridge across the Seine in Paris, despite its name meaning “New Bridge”. Commissioned by Henri IV in 1578 and completed in 1607, it was revolutionary for its time: the first Parisian bridge built without houses, with pavements to protect pedestrians from mud and traffic, and wide enough to become a hub of public life. Spanning 232 metres, its twelve arches link the Right Bank, the Île de la Cité, and the Left Bank, anchored by the equestrian statue of Henri IV at its centre. Constructed in limestone and characterised by its series of mascarons : 381 carved stone faces along the cornices , it has witnessed four centuries of Parisian history, from royal processions to street theatre. Today it remains a vital thoroughfare and a beloved landmark, periodically reimagined by artists such as Christo, who wrapped it in 1985, and JR, who transformed it into a mountain cave in 2026.
Why the Pont-Neuf?
JR has a habit of targeting monuments that carry weight. He made the Louvre Pyramid vanish in 2016 and cracked open the Palazzo Strozzi in Florence in 2021. The Pont-Neuf is deliberate: despite its name, “New Bridge,” it’s the oldest in Paris. It survived revolutions, Haussmann, world wars, and Christo’s 1985 wrapping. JR’s intervention digs deeper, literally. Paris is built on limestone : the stone for Notre-Dame and the Louvre came from quarries under the city. By turning the bridge back into raw rock, JR collapses architecture into geology, reminding Parisians that their city stands on the skeleton of an ancient sea.
The “cave” also nods to Plato’s allegory: are we looking at the bridge, or just shadows on a wall? In 2026, as Paris continues reshaping itself post-Olympics and post-Notre-Dame restoration, the piece asks what’s permanent and what’s projection.
The Logistics of An Epiphany
Like all JR’s works, The Pont Neuf cave is temporary. Installed over several nights to minimize disruption, it uses recyclable printed canvas and air-inflated structures anchored to the bridge. No stone was touched. Crowds gather daily on the Île de la Cité and Quai du Louvre, phones out, trying to catch the exact spot where masonry becomes mountain.
By June’s end, it will be gone. The bridge will return to stone, the illusion will live only in photos like this one and in memory. That’s the point. JR doesn’t make monuments. He makes moments that change how you see the ones that are already there.
In a city obsessed with permanence, The Pont Neuf cave is a reminder: even the oldest bridge can become something new, if only for a moment.
( Avtar Mota )















